The fundamental problem here is that in most places we've arbitrarily decided that certain things like:
- Roads
- Water/Trash/Sewer
- Police/Fire service
Are a part of municipal government, whereas:
- Electrical
- Telephone
- Cable TV
Are frequently not, but are regulated. Frequently, one of these last 3 will own the poles (usually the Electrical company, but sometimes the municipality) and the Phone/Cable companies lease the poles to put up their lines.
So, what do you do? Make the Electric company put up New Companies A-Z's lines for free? That doesn't work and would quickly lead to companies covering the lucrative part of town (read: "rich") and widening the digital divide.
It comes back to the bad decision that didn't force Cable to be a common carrier. Had that happened, we'd end up with a situation like DSL where there are multiple vendors, except the lines would have the same speed capabilities as Cable.
So, in short, it comes back to a bad FCC decision. Requiring a bunch of new physical infrastructure isn't needed when the existing could just be broken up and leased out as dumb pipes.
The problem is that eliminates the incentive for companies to build faster, better internet. We'd be stuck with what we have now for a very long time.
I do think it's fair to blame municipalities. Look at something that is much easier to build out: wireless networks. Cell coverage has dramatically improved over the past 10 years. In part, that's because multiple carriers are competing for customers and municipalities have largely stayed out of their way.
One could even argue that we're reliant on cable providers because there were no incentives for the highly regulated phone line providers to improve their networks.
Regional competition for services which require expensive infrastructure is non-existent once the first player has entered the market.
Any competitor trying to enter would need to build out the expensive infrastructure, only to be undercut in the following price war and lose because of recent costs. It's textbook game theory.
This lack of competition leads to a deterioration of quality of the service as the sole market holder doesn't need to continue to invest in infrastructure. Instead they can invest in lobbying which helps further cement their hold on their market, or invest in advertising to take customers away from shittier service alternatives, like DSL.
Quality is the exact reason why something like transportation is handled by local governments, as opposed to letting private toll roads dominate the market, which have no incentive to patch pot holes when it's the only option available.
> Regional competition for services which require expensive infrastructure is non-existent once the first player has entered the market.
This is just as true when the first player is a local (or State) government as when it's a private company.
> Quality is the exact reason why something like transportation is handled by local governments, as opposed to letting private toll roads dominate the market, which have no incentive to patch pot holes when it's the only option available.
Local governments often don't do a good job of patching potholes either. (Nor do State governments, which often own major highways.)
Not so. Public sector monopolies are not aligned with profit-hungry shareholders, board of investors, executives looking for bonuses, etc. Instead public sector monopolies are aligned with quality, and making enough revenue to break even.
And don't cherry pick some individual poorer counties for road performance, even though on a whole they are better. I could cherry pick Somalia as an example of privately maintained transportation monopolies.
How can you eliminate competition that does not exist? By definition, what the cable companies are doing now is eliminating competition, because there is none. Any change is an improvement.
I believe that to be an eminently reasonable interpretation of the history and current situation.
What was the history that led to a the non-common carrier ruling? Was it thought that cable companies would upgrade infrastructure more quickly if they didn't have to sell access to their lines?
Here's what the NCTA has to say about it now: https://www.ncta.com/platform/public-policy/why-its-a-good-t... Given the success of broadband in areas where the lines are sold like they would be in a common carrier situation, it's hard to believe anything they say.
The version I learned is that it's a historical artifact from dial-up Internet.
You had the phone lines from the phone company (natural monopoly, common carrier), and completely separately you had an ISP with a modem bank hooked up to an Internet uplink (competitive, information service).
Then you had the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (I turned twelve that year!), where the phone company had to allow the ISPs to use the phone lines at wholesale rates. So you get ISDN and later DSL with that same split between who controls the wires and who controls the Internet uplink.
Then you get cable Internet. Which does not use common-carrier wires (I assume this is related to not-so-modern TV being entirely one-way). And which end up classified the same way as potentially-unbundled Internet that runs over the phone company's wires, despite being controlled by the same people as the wires it runs on.
Then for whatever reason all the independent DSL providers disappeared (or at least shrunk to where they can't afford noticeable advertising campaigns). I don't know if the phone companies found a way around having to share their lines, or put less effort into maintaining lines used by independent ISPs to discourage people using them (I know I heard this suggested back when it was new, no idea if it was reasonable or just a conspiracy theory), or just out-competed them based on there being a single bill and a single point-of-contact (and no finger-pointing) for problems. I guess it can't be the first option, since I've heard that a few parts of the country actually have more than 2 choices (cable company & phone company) for Internet service.
Would shifting these responsibilities to the government necessarily solve the problem? After all, the police (and the fire department, in SoCal, anyways) don't do a job of equitably serving the poor relative to the rich, either.
Dwindling demand for what? Broadband? There was a natural upgrade path for DSL: push the fiber network closer and closer to the premises, eventually building FTTN with VDSL2 to the premises. That'd support 100 megabit service. Nobody did it, because who wants to spend billions building infrastructure for your competitors?
Of course, here in the UK, in a lot of places, we have just that - FTTC with VDSL to the home, which a number of companies share. Less common in rural places, of course, but in cities and even a number of towns it can be hard to find places that don't have it now.
We have a single company (BT Openreach) that's highly regulated by Ofcom which lays said cables and owns the relevant last mile infrastructure. This company then sells access to said infrastructure to retail ISPs.
Ofcom has enough teeth to force this company to perform upgrades, through both Government-based power, and the fact that because if the company didn't, the retail ISPs could reasonably band together and lay their own cables (at significant cost and likely regulatory nightmares, but they could certainly tear into Openreach's margins). There's a couple of companies which already do that on their own; Virgin is one, I believe, and it's trying to follow the US "media company" model.
So basically: we have a model in which we've managed to allow for a single company to exist without competition because that's the most efficient way to manage national physical infrastructure, but there's enough regulations and threats floating about that it more-or-less does what its customers (the retail ISPs) want, which in turn more-or-less do what their customers (Internet users) want due to competition. That is, we've built a system in which there's enough money floating around to potentially replace Openreach if we really, really had to.
The difference is that BT was a government owned corporation, and when it was privatized, the government: 1) gave notice to Investors who bought the stock; 2) created a cost recovery and profit scheme for the company; 3) wrote that scheme into the prospectus for the share sales.
A slight nitpick: BT was privatised in 1984 - what they did get was a strong regulator in the form of Oftel (now Ofcom) - it was Oftel who made BT offer Local Loop Unbundling (in general policy in 1999 and specifically as part of BT's license in 2000):
Which is precisely why we need infrastructure companies and service provider companies and never the twain shall they meet. Frankly local governments should contract out to a company to lay fiber all over the place to each house and then provide a local hosting center where service companies can put their equipment and connect to the fiber. Comcast wants to connect to x number of people? Fine. Verizon wants to connect to xx number of people? Okay. Mom and Pop Internet Co. has a couple dozen customers? Open Access! Fiber's tiny, you could lay enough strands to each house that each provider could connect to one. Infrastructure company not living up to their end of the bargain? Not being responsive to outages and such? Kick them out on their asses and get a new one. Other than setting up the relationships and policing for abuse the local government can just stay out of it.
We had a time when a company spent billions of dollars building infrastructure for their competitors. We've never had as good competition since that time, the dial-up days.
If you want to go that route then you're going to have to find billions of dollars in cash to pay the contractors laying the fiber. Good luck with that.
Voters love tax increases and municipal debt so raising the money should be easy compared to finding enough qualified contractors for a large scale project like this.
That's ridiculous. Who's going to do the work? Not government workers. Who's going to provide the services? Not the government. The funds would be raised the same way as any other corporate project. The only difference is separation of the infrastructure providers from the service providers. Service providers will pay the infrastructure providers for access to the connections to their customers. That's how it will be paid for. Startup fees could be in the form of bonds that could be paid back over time. Hell, some companies would probably buy in just for an equal chance to compete with Comcast or Verizon in a given area.
Look, we own the roads. Not Ford, not Chevrolet, not Toyota. In some places the roads are not in great shape because the money isn't being spent where it should to keep it up. That is a government problem but it's mostly a lazy voter problem. There are people that argue less government is the solution to our problems when they're too lazy to hold the government accountable for misappropriating money and giving kickbacks to their corporate friends and future employers. Despite the problems, it's still better than having all of the roads owned by Ford and then anyone who wants to drive a Toyota on those roads has to pay a huge "wrong car" tax.. I mean fee.. or drive at half the speed or something else ridiculous. (you could call it road neutrality) I'm not even suggesting we should own the network. I'm not even saying we should "own" the dark fiber to each house. I'm suggesting we should make it so competition can flourish instead of being choked off.
You're not going to have it by making companies build out brand new infrastructure for every company. Completely eliminate all other barriers other than buying the lines and putting them up. That's still tons of money, even for a small area. In the old days a mom & pop ISP could start up by ordering a T1 and a few phone lines from the phone company. The phone company was the infrastructure. If there are 30 companies that want to offer service to a city do you propose all 30 build out some sort of cabling all over town? Don't be ridiculous. Can you imagine? Then most of them go out of business because there's not enough of a market to sustain that and billions of dollars sit rotting on the poles instead of being used for a good purpose.
I'm telling you. Fiber to the home with a colocation facility or facilities that they all run to. Put several strands so if someone wants to buy Fiber TV from Comcast, Fiber phone from Verizon and Fiber Internet from whoever else each company can have their own lines. Or hell, if they want all 3 from Comcast then they can just use 1 fiber line. If you get Internet from Mom & pop co and they go out of business then you can switch providers by subscribing to a new one and they will do what they need to in the colocation to move your fiber over to their system.
The only role in the government is, as the representative of the customers who are requesting the service, to set up relationships and take action when there's abuse such as price fixing or if the infrastructure company turns out to be a bunch of deadbeats.
Nobody is going to voluntarily build an infrastructure only company. It's a chicken and egg scenario, what use is it if no one is offering a service over it? What use is a service without the infrastructure to support it?
As an aside, If your only concern as a voter is how low your taxes are then you're part of the problem, not the solution. You should be concerned about what value your taxes are bringing you. You could be paying less taxes but much much more in other areas as a result. You'll never be able to pay as low taxes as the guy who can afford to make sure he's paying the lowest taxes.
Municipally owned/maintained FTTH with ISP access from an analog to a CO is a good thing IMO and something that the incumbents have used the courts to shut down in the past[1]. The Wired piece makes a seemingly legitimate argument (franchise agreements increase the cost for new entrants) while ignoring the actual alternative (which would dramatically decrease the cost for new entrants) that those outside of the industry may not even be aware of and in that regard is a bit dishonest.
Why is this coming up now? One of the interesting tidbits I picked up from industry coverage[2] of the current round of FCC rule making is "Wheeler intends to nullify state laws that prevent local governments from establishing broadband service". Which is something I don't think the industry wants to happen. So, yeah open access is great but giving cities the "If you don't provide acceptable internet service we will" stick is valuable as well.
Hopefully, they are successful. Municipal governments aren't equipped to make these decisions.
In my city (Albany, NY), the city signed a 10 year franchise agreeing giving Time Warner a monopoly on tv services, which makes the city much less attractive for FIOS, which is available in most surrounding communities.
Why did they do this? Some idiot activists got the city to demand that TWC provide a public access channel (hello, 1982) and to build a "TV studio" in the local high school.
So the cable companies aren't aggressively lobbying municipal governments to keep out competition? Where do you think these costs came from?
And god forbid the municipality try to build out its own network. That will just inspire the incumbent cable company to take them to court until the project gets scrapped.
No, I think we can pretty easily blame Big Cable for this one.
Governments create and enforce laws, so they must be held accountable for them. If the government didn't have such discretionary power, lobbying would not be a thing at all.
I don't blame the big cable companies for doing it, since they'd be at a competitive disadvantage otherwise.
Remember that humans operate companies and governments alike. Except governments use force and companies are subject to it.
It astounds me how people will happily let companies off the hook for causing negative externalities, while simultaneously blaming the government for failing to regulate them effectively and decrying the regulation in the first place.
"Remember that humans operate companies and governments alike. Except governments use force and companies are subject to it."
He who wields the weapon is responsible for the results. Government wields the power of coercion, thus the results of coercion is their responsibility - and the shared responsibility of those that consent to such government. Yes, the lobbyists who abuse the coercive power of government share the blame - but so do you, if you support the existence of this coercive power and their ability to abuse it. If somebody tricks you into shooting yourself in the foot by claiming your foot is a space alien intending to eat you - he is to blame for tricking you, and you are to blame for being an idiot. You can say we should get the world rid of the people who are willing to trick idiots for their own profit, but I say it may be much more practical to try and be idiots less frequently. Because the former is not very likely to happen anytime soon.
I work for a major wireless carrier - we see this all the time with permitting - many of our rural sites dont even require a permit - we can just go out and swap the equipment on the pad, hand the new stuff on the tower.
Our urban sites, some of them are just now getting permits that were applied for in 2011, not to mention the couple hundred bucks in fees (or more) to get said permits - all to simply change a bit of hardware bolted to a concrete pad - and on top, often costs for reinspection once were done bolting the new stuff on.
I think it is absolutely key to look past all the rhetoric and see what Google is actually asking for in return for building fiber.
> In Kansas City and Austin, local governments wanted Google Fiber more than they wanted kickbacks. So they expedited the permitting process, gave Google rights-of-way access for little to no cost, and allowed Google to build-out selectively — i.e., in neighborhoods where consumers actually expressed demand.
Kansas City agreed to get the permits done in 5 days. Provo sold Google for $1 a fiber network they had spent over $30 million constructing. Most if not all of the cities declined to impose build-out requirements: enough users had to sign up in each "Fiberhood" to justify Google deploying there.
This stands in stark contrast to what happens when companies try to deploy fiber or cable in other places.
In addition to the hefty franchise fee, paid out of gross, the city extracts a couple of million dollars in funding for government programs, and imposes a built-out requirement that requires Comcast to build out to every neighborhood above a certain (low) density, even if enough customers don't sign up to make it profitable. Similar build-out requirements killed FIOS deployment in the city: http://www.fiercetelecom.com/story/verizon-defends-honor-wil....
In short, I can't have FIOS because Verizon wasn't willing to build it out to all the neighborhoods in the city that have 30-50% of its residents living under the poverty line.
("Once cities provide these handouts, they don’t have much leverage. They’ll end up bowing and scraping and hoping that Uncle Google throws a bit more fiber their way, someday. The experience in Kansas City — where suburbs are stuck waiting for Google to extend its fiberhoods — suggests that cities in a region targeted by Google Fiber should work together on setting expectations and deadlines. Yes, a provider like Google may abandon a city that doesn’t play along. But is that such a loss if the company ends up cherry-picking and making the market less attractive to other providers — including public utilities — that might come and provide fast broadband for everyone?")
In other words, they want to subject fiber deployment to the typical class warfare that characterizes municipal politics. It's better for nobody to have fiber than for wealthier areas to get it while communities that can't afford it don't. In New York City, the mayor has turned Verizon's FIOS deployment into an economic justice issue and hired a civil rights lawyer: http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20140219/TECHNOLOGY/140....
Who do you blame for not having fiber? How many cities would already have competitors deploying fiber if they had adopted the kind of regulatory regimes Google is demanding as a pre-condition for launching fiber?
Ensuring universal service is something that governments try to do for things considered "essential": electricity, water, postal service, and broadband Internet.
The reason that Verizon signs contracts to serve all of a city like Wilmington, DE is that there are enough households who can afford it to make it worth their while. If Google comes and picks off the highest-value customers, the mix of remaining customers may not be worth serving from Verizon's perspective, and they may exit the market. (And even if Google is blocked by municipal governments, alternatives like WiMAX and its successors are much harder to block).
I don't think there's an easy solution to this problem. If you just let the market do its thing, then fewer people will have access to Internet overall. The tradeoff isn't easy.
There is an easy econ 101 answer response. If you're really trying to help the poor at the (presumably managable) expense of everyone else, then subsidize the subscriptions of the poor households by explicitly taxing. This dramatically reduces market distortions and makes clear exactly what's happening. Putting up rules that require the rich to indirectly subsidize the poor in the way being described (making the tax invisible) predictably leads to an awful situation.
People often reply "this isn't politically feasible", but that's giving up the game. If the opaque, inefficient, and difficult-to-measure strategy is politically feasible but the transparent one is not, that's a good sign it's a bad choice.
Yep. Though subsidising subscriptions is a pretty non transparent way of tendering for access. If you are in the business of creating lots of little monopolies to achieve universal access, wouldn't it be more transparent to just create one big monopoly?
We tried this in oz. A gov. built backbone to be sold off (the naturally competitive part), with a gov. built and maintained 'fibre to the home' access (the natural monopoly part).
Fox / News waged a months long campaign to have them booted out of office, in which they explicitly and repeatedly called the gov. nazi's, and outrageously lied about the associated costs for both the gov. and opposition broadband systems. Now we have a system which locks in contracts for the backbone, and rents copper infrastructure for the next 50 years for access. If you want fibre access, you have to pay for it to be hooked up at a prohibitively large cost.
We know we can deliver access to everyone in oz through gov. for close to the price of delivering access to a privileged few through market monopolies. At a certain point, you have to realise this isn't about bad political choice, but a deliberate and sustained attempt to lock in privilege for the wealthy at the expense of everyone else. This is the real market distortion.
> If you're really trying to help the poor at the (presumably managable) expense of everyone else, then subsidize the subscriptions of the poor households by explicitly taxing.
Isn't this exactly what local governments are doing? It's just that the tax falls on the (shareholders of) broadband companies, who are presumably not, for the most part, local residents. The reason this is more politically feasible is not that it isn't a tax, but that the tax is not being levied on voters. Or does the name matter that much?
The problem is that taxing entrants into the cable market creates a very high barrier to entry. The tax is not being levied directly on voters, but indirectly, by creating a monopoly that provides poor service, when they could instead have competition providing great service.
> The tax is not being levied directly on voters, but indirectly, by creating a monopoly that provides poor service, when they could instead have competition providing great service.
But isn't the point here precisely that without the tax or other barriers to entry, "they" would not have great service? Some might -- but it seems likely that far fewer would get it than with build-out requirements and so on in place. I think the government has an obligation to avoid leaving those people behind in this case.
An explicit tax on the company by the local government would still be better than a build-out requirement, since this would at least be transparent.
But even if you want to transfer money from someone to the poor, and (perhaps unethically) you want to take it from someone who's not a voter, it still makes no sense to pick on this particular company. Why not tax any of the other non-voting companies that service a locality? Say, the tax on coca-cola?
> An explicit tax on the company by the local government would still be better than a build-out requirement, since this would at least be transparent.
I guess I don't quite see how it's more transparent. What information would it provide, and to whom, that the current system obscures? And is the issue whether we call it a "tax" vs. "build-out requirement", or is the issue what is being taxed (land use vs. revenue from local customers vs. ...)? I can't picture what such a tax would look like, how it would really differ from the status quo, and why it would result in better service -- walk me through it.
> But even if you want to transfer money from someone to the poor, and (perhaps unethically) you want to take it from someone who's not a voter, it still makes no sense to pick on this particular company. Why not tax any of the other non-voting companies that service a locality? Say, the tax on coca-cola?
Well, I take it that there are some relevant differences here, as qq66 pointed out. Internet access is infrastructure, and increasingly, it is essential; access to Coca-Cola is not. I think the government has some obligation to avoid creating a disparity between haves and have-nots for infrastructure like this. It's not the only consideration, but that is one reason build-out requirements are appropriate for broadband companies, while not for soda vendors.
Also, this infrastructure often has to be built on public land. It's the government's job to make sure that land is managed well for an indefinite period into the future, presumably well beyond the life of whatever cable is being laid down. This is why it's appropriate for the government to demand more oversight of these companies in general, whether that comes in the form of build-out requirements, a fund for cleanup fees, or whatever. A story I've seen again and again is public land rights being granted to a private company, which subsequently damages the land and then tries to stick the public with the bill. The government has an obligation to protect public interest in the land and avoid that kind of situation. Again, it has no such obligation with respect to many other businesses: Coca-Cola doesn't need land rights to sell bottles in private stores, so that kind of oversight is not appropriate.
> I guess I don't quite see how it's more transparent. What information would it provide, and to whom, that the current system obscures? And is the issue whether we call it a "tax" vs. "build-out requirement", or is the issue what is being taxed (land use vs. revenue from local customers vs. ...)?
The transparency issue is that a build-out requirement isn't denominated in dollars. (There are other economic efficiency arguments, such as if the poor people would rather have the money than the cable connection, but I'm addressing your question on transparency.)
A cable company has much more expertise than a local government for what the long-run costs and potential profits are for a build-out requirement, and moreover they have a much higher incentives to apply their expertise to the local situation than a politician. If you institute a build-out rule, it does so without knowing the size of the costs; they are simply imposed silently. Any future public debate about revising the rule is enfeebled.
> I can't picture what such a tax would look like, how it would really differ from the status quo, and why it would result in better service -- walk me through it.
The company is charged $X per year to use public rights of way. The government hands this money to the poor people who can choose to buy cable connections or not. (If they don't, this is a sign that they have something better to use the money on.) If the government doesn't trust the poor people to use the money responsibly, then the government directly subsidizes their cable connection fees instead.
> Well, I take it that there are some relevant differences here, as qq66 pointed out. Internet access is infrastructure, and increasingly, it is essential; access to Coca-Cola is not. I think the government has some obligation to avoid creating a disparity between haves and have-nots for infrastructure like this. It's not the only consideration, but that is one reason build-out requirements are appropriate for broadband companies, while not for soda vendors.
You missed the point. I wasn't saying that we should have build-out requirements for soda, I was saying that if we use a tax instead, then we can take the subsidizing resources from anyone rather than just a company in the field whose customers we wish to help. This would allows us much greater flexibility in getting those resources in a non-distortive way.
> whether that comes in the form of build-out requirements, a fund for cleanup fees, or whatever.
A fund for cleanup fees is completely different idea, and indeed is generally economically sensible. (Clean up fees are about correctly pricing externalities. Build out requirements are about getting one group of people to subsidize another.)
> A story I've seen again and again is public land rights being granted to a private company, which subsequently damages the land and then tries to stick the public with the bill.
This has nothing to do with the topic. I've seen people litter all the time in public spaces. Should I institute the loud-car ban because some people have littered in the past?
Whoops, I wrote this in haste but now it's too late to edit. The last sentence referred to an analogy that I decided didn't work. I would say: just because I've seen people litter all the time in public places doesn't have much to do with the badness (or non-badness) of economically inefficient/opaque methods for correcting other bad externalities.
> The transparency issue is that a build-out requirement isn't denominated in dollars...If you institute a build-out rule, it does so without knowing the size of the costs; they are simply imposed silently.
OK, I think I see.
> The company is charged $X per year to use public rights of way. The government hands this money to the poor people who can choose to buy cable connections or not. (If they don't, this is a sign that they have something better to use the money on.)
But I'm still having trouble seeing how this scenario improves on the original problem.
I thought that local governments were already charging $X for uses of rights of way, and build-out requirements are in addition to this. So if I understand right, the idea is to charge more (say $(X + Y)) but not impose those requirements, and instead let the broadband companies decide where and when to build out; then distribute the excess $Y (and, possibly, funds from elsewhere) to subsidize Internet service for the poor.
The problem I see here is that, if I'm one of those N poor folks the broadband company decides it doesn't want to build out to, I'm out of luck. I don't even have the option of buying broadband service, and offering up my $Y/N dollars does not give me much leverage to change that. If enough of my neighbors got together and pooled our funds, maybe that would be enough to convince the company to build out to our neighborhood, but maybe not, especially if (1) the company has already decided our neighborhood isn't worth it, or (2) building out would require the company to pay more in right-of-way fees (though maybe this is included in the initial $X+Y price?).
In short, it seems like our government trades the relatively strong leverage we have as a collected political force for the relatively weak leverage we each have as individuals, plus $Y/N dollars apiece.
In this particular case, that does not sound like a good trade, for the reasons I mentioned: Internet access is more or less essential infrastructure, and there is public interest in having nearly-universal access to that infrastructure, rather than a class of haves and a class of have-nots.
I wouldn't think it's that the government doesn't trust the poor (or really, anyone not yet built-out-to) to spend this money on responsibly. Rather, it's that divvying it up and letting individuals make their own decisions on how to spend it sacrifices political and economic coordination, which is required in this case to serve a desireable public end, near-universal access. Solving coordination problems like this is a big part of why governments exist, and we shouldn't be rushing to give up that coordination for individual decision making. We can easily end up in a situation where we're all worse off that way.
Explicitly taxing and subsidizing involves the kind of economy planning you don't want in a free market. Plus, it's a permanent fix. It's much easier for the government to build the fiber infrastructure, lease it to operators in the short term, possibly sell it or spin it off in the medium term. Just give the free market a bump to move it out of a local maximum.
I think wireless obviates the universal access angle for wired broadband. Its already how most poor people access the internet. They very often don't have personal computers.
Yes, but the bandwidth is sufficient to access job applications, educational materials, etc. Heck, right now, I don't have wired internet at home, just my cell phone. I don't think the poor need fiber for Netflix, torrents, etc.
But absolutely the bandwidth is sufficient to live in the present.. or at least the recent past. It is sufficient to access the services that poor people need because they are poor.
Ok so rich people get $70 a month unlimited broadband (cheap) while the poor have to pay $150 for expensive lte with a useage cap.
If they had framily plans and bling phones and could fool people into paying $10/gb for fiber than verizon would have put up fios everywhere 10 years ago. The trouble is that fiber is too cheap.
Republic Wireless has 4G unlimited everything plan for $40/month. I don't buy it because I'm fine with 3G for the phone - viewing HD movies on the phone is not my priority. I'm sure there are even cheaper ways to get basic wireless connectivity. Of course, if you want to watch netflix in HD 24x7 while running a torrent exchange and a game server, that would not be enough. But we're talking about basic needs, right?
Here in Wilmington, MetroPCS offers unlimited talk, text, and data with 500 MB of LTE for $40. 2.5 GB of LTE for $50. These folks have a cell phone anyway, sometimes subsidized by the government. A cell is a lot more valuable to them than a wired connection. Any money spent on fiber would be an additional expense.
Wow, 2.5 GB, that will get you through a whole lot of educational videos. If your lucky and really careful with how you ration your usage, it might last a whole week! Only $50. I'm sure even the poorest of the poor can afford 200/month!
As someone who comes from a country where bandwidth caps are the norm. I can tell you that you have no idea how easy it is to control/monitor your usage. You're spoiled by having huge bandwidth pipes and caps, so you have no notion about how to conserve and utilize it efficiently.
Wireless is the predominant form of internet access in the majority of Africa. The poor might not have a place to sleep, but I guarantee you, they have a cheap cellphone. The slightly better off have a smart phone or blackberry with data access.
It might not be perfect. They might not be able to watch Netflix or hours of educational videos on youtube, but it's a start and better than what the poor have traditionally had since ever. Please stop moving the goal posts, it's intellectually dishonest.
As someone who lives in a part of the US that only has Satellite Internet and relevant bandwidth caps, I can tell you that I am under no such spoilage.
I am open to any suggestions on bandwidth conservation.
In the future, you may want to get the facts before jumping to judgement, though :)
So let me understand this. The government wants to have everybody to have fast internet, regardless of the ability to pay for it. The government does not have the clout to force the taxpayers to pay for it collectively (e.g. by raising taxes) so it tries to make providers to pay for it by building out. The providers don't go for it, so nobody has fast internet at all. Yeah, sounds logical, I don't see any easy solution for it.
Except, you know, for the government to stop being control freaks for a minute, let the people that can pay to pay, and as the cost of basic service eventually and inevitably drops have more and more people enjoy it. Of course, that means that somebody who doesn't have any money wouldn't be able to enjoy the fastest broadband service available on the market, so if it's absolutely imperative everybody would be equal - the solution is always the same, the lowest common denominator.
There is an easy solution, you just should be willing to see it.
It's the dirty little secret about democracy/government that no one wants to mention. Everyone has grand ideas, and noble causes. But no one has the political balls, or the support of the people to actually fix it with actual solutions. So it's this constant back/forth game of funding and blame... and it never fully solves the problem. All it does is siphon funds from the public into the pockets of the politically connected ruling class and make it seem like the problem requires "just a little more" funding to make it work.
Putting broadband internet on the same level as electricity and water seems absurd to me. By far the most common use cases for broadband are streaming video, gaming/DLC, and piracy. Is there really a point where it becomes reasonable to consider Netflix, Xbox live, and The Pirate Bay essential services?
"Most common use cases" by volume of traffic maybe, but Internet is increasingly necessary to pay bills, correspond with customer service for practically any company, communicate with your child's teacher at school, renew your driver's license, and practically any other mundane task.
It's not that there aren't offline alternatives for these, but they require maintaining an expensive infrastructure of buildings and people. It's going to be cheaper for everyone in the long run if we can move everybody to doing things over the Internet.
None of those require broadband (2 Mb or greater according to the FCC, IIRC) though. We're talking about fiber connections in the hundred to thousand megabit range here. Nobody is talking about cutting poorer neighborhoods off from the internet completely.
Seems pretty short sighted. There is so much being created that is connected to the internet. You say you don't need high bandwidth for these things and I would say that is because they are made with the fact that there are a lot of customers who don't have the higher bandwidth. Give everyone more bandwidth and just think of what we could create!
> None of those require broadband (2 Mb or greater according to the FCC, IIRC) though.
Really? Have you tried your bank's website over dialup? Or a typical bill pay site? (DSL typically meets the 2Mb or greater threshold, so it qualifies as broadband by your definition.)
I had 768/128Kbps DSL until last month (when my wife got fed up with poor streaming video quality and called the telco about upgrading). For using my bank, credit card company, and "social networking" sites it was fine. That's not dial up speed, I realize, but it's not 2Mbps, either. Since the upgrade to 7/1Mbps service I have observed that sites I thought were slow on the old service are still slow. My wife says YouTube and Hulu are better. I am pleased that my VPN to home seems better (which I attribute to the increased upload bandwidth).
It's either 56k or crappy DSL (2M) for these 'hoods, which equals a "cut off" these days in which everyone and their mother has a landing page with 2MB+ footprint.
It would be a good idea for the government at least to set the standard for their essential websites to not have 2MB+ footprint. As for the commercial ones, that would be for them to decide if they want larger audience or not.
You don't need Google fiber to send email or browse basic text site. Much better idea would be to force government sites that provide bill payments and other essential services (which 100% of them btw can be still paid by old fashioned phone call as far as I know) to have low bandwidth requirements and low compatibility reqs (i.e. no flash, no Java applets, no excessive graphics, etc.). This would also ensure better accessibility, but also would mean you never need 100M channel to just pay your bill.
> By far the most common use cases for broadband are streaming video, gaming/DLC, and piracy. Is there really a point where it becomes reasonable to consider Netflix, Xbox live, and The Pirate Bay essential services?
Ah yes, you can use it for trivial things, so let's totally ignore all the crucial information and services that are only available on the internet. That seems reasonable.
So what are the “crucial information and services” exactly that require gigabit internet access (Google Fiber's selling point, after all) today?
Although “broadband” has always been a moving target, I think it is reasonable to say that essential services won't require gigabit internet access in the next decade or so.
Telepresence teaching for the poor? Are you actually serious? Rather just fix the schools, please. Instead of throwing money at a "problem" that you invented a need for.
I know as tech people we're inclined to think that more tech can always fix the world's problems. But that's a venus project type of fly-trap, and we must be careful not to fall for it!
Are they totally trivial things? Most poor people are working poor at jobs they don't particularly like. Should they be miserable at all times of the day just because they are poor?
As broadband becomes more pervasive I think we'll see other uses (for example, I could see VR being incorporated into virtual high schools for things like simulating a chemistry lab.)
How long did it take for electricity to be considered a necessity? And I'm legitimately curious how much of a factor radio was in motivating people to make the switch...
No, but I would argue that regular internet is approaching an essential service. Nobody needs FiOS but lots of people need access to email/web browser/etc.
I am still not convinced broad band internet is a life necessity. We assume everyone wants it as we are techies, but even I know tech oriented people without home internet service, they cut that cable too. They live totally by what they get through celluar.
While I know plenty of people like those you've mentioned, I still think the further into the future we go the more high speed internet becomes a life necessity.
How much longer will we all have physical offices to work in as opposed to a virtual reality space that emulates the same thing? How many businesses like my own that don't actually have a physical address are there going to be? At what point do business completely stop accepting physical forms of payment? "Cutting the cord" completely is likely to get much more difficult in the future.
>>> How much longer will we all have physical offices to work
Probably for a very long time. Nothing is like actual human contact.
>>> At what point do business completely stop accepting physical forms of payment?
Depends on the business. Some already did - Amazon doesn't accept cash as far as I can see. Some - like your local grocery store - probably never will, because sizable part of its clientele will still have cash.
Your arguments make sense in many ways, but I do think ensuring that everyone has access to broadband internet is something that is worth worrying about. If we just allow market forces to determine who gets access to the new broadband, a lot of (poorer) people will not get access. I think just saying "well it sucks to be them" is not a satisfactory answer.
Now I agree that everyone should have access to broadband but this raises many questions for me.
Why can't the rich get access to gigabit while the poor has access to a few megabit?
Just like ten years ago, when the rich had access to megabit and the poor used kilobit access.
Or ten years before that, when the richest could pay for high kilobit access while the poor were stuck to dialup low kilobit access.
I don't understand what's wrong with a long term rollout plan that finances the future scale with large costs to those willing to pay them.
Is it wrong because it's a utility? Why aren't we up in arms about the non-megabit (or barely megabit) non-low-latency access that so much of rural america is already stuck with?
I just don't get this. Fiber will get cheaper, but only if we train tens thousands about it in smaller rollouts while building up the supply side with increasingly larger rollouts.
Why can't the rich get access to gigabit while the poor has access to a few megabit?
We may want to avoid a scenario where fiber is unregulated, then incumbent ISPs also get deregulated out of fairness (Austin is currently at this step), then incumbent ISPs stop maintaining/installing service in poor areas, so rich people get gigabit and poor people get no bits at all.
Very small number of people are rich enough to build their own roads (with all rights of way issues, etc.). And each road would only connect very small number of points. Helicopter probably would be way, way cheaper at this point.
Paid roads with less traffic, etc. or paid lanes are a commonplace, OTOH, but one doesn't have to be exactly rich to use them.
It's important everyone has access, but just about every technology in the history of technology has gone through a cycle of early adopter => general use => commodity. If wealthy neighborhoods are never allowed to adopt fiber, fiber will never be cheap enough to deploy in Nowhere, USA.
There's always a fixed labor cost for laying the pipes, but the endpoint hardware for fiber is currently pretty pricey. Compare to cable, whose modems used to be hundreds of dollars, and can now be had for $30.
The question isn't whether you subsidize access for the poor, it's how. Build-out requirements and forcing ISP's to discount services for the poor is an attempt to shift the burden from taxpayers to ISP's, and has the unintended consequence of making it so that only the de-facto monopolies find it worthwhile to build in most cities.
I can't speak to the other cities, but please do not cite NYC as an example in your argument. De Blasio is not what's preventing FiOS expantion in NYC - Verizon is[0].
As someone who actually lives in NYC and has tried to get FiOS installed in multiple buildings, there are two problems. One is that buildings have exclusive agreements to provide television service through either Time Warner or Comcast (usually because the superintendant and/or owner gets free cable as a result of this agreement), and that Verizon refuses to provide FiOS Internet unless they can also provide television service.
Verizon is fully aware of this problem, and they've framed it in a way that allows them conveniently to point the finger at another entity.
Verizon is "trying" to deploy FiOS in New York, but they're not really interested in expanding their coverage.
> De Blasio has hired a civil rights lawyer to look into the issue of poor people not being able to afford FIOS! I would say the bottleneck is definitely NYC's government
This would only be relevant if the NYC government were the ones actively blocking people who can afford to pay for FiOS from having it installed, but as explained above, that's not the case.
(You mentioned this point in another thread, but I responded rather late, so perhaps you didn't see it. In any case, my response is still relevant here. )
[0] This should be evident even from the fact that De Blasio's only been in office for less than 6 months, and it's been years since Verizon made an honest effort to expand FiOS coverage in New York.
These agreements (which are common) cover television, not Internet.
It's certainly the building's fault as well, but if Verizon really cared about expanding FiOS Internet, they'd agree to provide Internet service to a building even without providing television service[0].
Either way, whoever's fault it is, though, it's certainly not De Blasio's fault (which you asserted in your original post).
[0] Which they did do in the early days in some districts out in Long Island, but they stopped this around the same time as they stopped expanding FiOS into new areas.
I don't see why Verizon has any obligations to do business on the conditions which Comcast sets. It may very well be that the internet service is a loss leader for their TV service for them (I don't know that for the fact but sounds plausible from your description). They won't change their whole business strategy just because Comcast bribed some superintendent. I'd say in this case it's either the tenants find a way to get out of the vendor lockup, or they get no FiOS. It's not Verizon's fault.
The counterbalance is that Google offers free plans after install for "Basic Speeds". IIRC they also threw in free internet for municipal buildings such as libraries.
Nothing Verizon, Comcast, or Time Warner offers compares to 5 Mbps/1 Mbps for a one-time $300 install cost.
It's better for nobody to have fiber than for wealthier areas to get it while communities that can't afford it don't.
This is like saying that if you can't bring poor people up, the answer is to bring rich people down, keeping everything frozen until the technology is cheap. And I presume that the assumption that underlies this is that the wealthy have done nothing, or not enough to deserve the lives they lead?
Do you have any idea how vicious that sounds?
(Also, the revenues generated from early adopters often pave the way for later generations of lower-priced goods. Do you have any idea where we'd be if no one was allowed to sell smartphones until they became cheap enough for "everyone?" We'd still be stuck with those awful feature phones if that were the case.)
If, for example, I call up a pizzeria and ask whether they offer delivery, both common sense and common “usage,” […] would prevent them from answering: ‘No, we do not offer delivery–but if you order a pizza from us, we’ll bake it for you and then bring it to your house.’ The logical response to this would be something on the order of, ‘so, you do offer delivery.’ But our pizza-man may continue to deny the obvious and explain, paraphrasing the FCC and the Court: ‘No, even though we bring the pizza to your house, we are not actually “offering” you delivery, because the delivery that we provide to our end users is “part and parcel” of our pizzeria-pizza-at-home service and is “integral to its other capabilities.”’
> Provo sold Google for $1 a fiber network they had spent over $30 million constructing.
I hope the Councillors were impeached for that. Lease it for $1 per year, sure, but to hand over public infrastructure to a corporation in that manner is appalling.
Is every one of the cities on Google's list of upcoming cities to receive Fiber agreeing to the same thing? And will Google stop deploying fiber once they've exhausted all of this low-hanging fruit? It seems unlikely.
And will Google stop deploying fiber once they've exhausted all of this low-hanging fruit?
Either that or they can raise prices to, say, $300/month. The Google Fiber business model appears to require political concessions to be even remotely viable.
Why do you say that? Incumbent ISPs seem to be profitable even though they are paying municipal kickbacks and passing people who can't afford to subscribe.
Where I live Comcast is barred from offering me Internet access due to the small city I live in offering another cable company a long term monopoly.
So I pay $75 for 15 mbps. I could be paying $25 less and getting twice the speed if I lived 10 minutes another direction.
Local governments are at least half the problem, but it's clearly a public + private collusion problem, in which both parties work together to establish monopolies. And the solution is simple (but will never happen): all telecom monopoly contracts should be voided nationally, immediately.
The 1992 Cable Act made it illegal to grant exclusive cable franchises. Since the franchises were generally renewed every 10-12 years, very few places (I don't know of any) still have legal monopolies.
> Where I live Comcast is barred from offering me Internet access
You can partly thank the FCC for this. They imposed limitations on Comcast's growth that effectively require Comcast to sell off an existing market if they want to enter a new market. I'm sure their intentions were good at the time but it turns out if you limit the growth of company they might try to find new revenue streams like I dunno... paid traffic prioritization.
If I'm reading Wikipedia correctly, Wired is owned by Conde Nast, which is owned by Advance Publications, which also has a large stake in the Discovery network.
We seem to be in as bad a situation now, as we were in when the telephone company had a monopoly running right up to the jacks in your house. (And most likely sold you the phone that plugged into that jac on top of it!)
Oh, it was worse than that. You used to not even own your phone, only rent it from the telephone company; a lot of elderly couples are still getting charged for that phone they rented, and threw out, decades ago [1]. Thankfully, most customers are now at least allowed the tiny luxury of their own cable modem.
Who would want an ISP to innovate? Latency, bandwidth and cost are the only things that matter. ISPs should be prohibited from offering anything else than internet access. No phone, no video, no toilet cover delivery.
Not by the ISP. All their equipment is made by other companies (like Cisco, Juniper, etc.) who do that kind of innovation. They're just buying the pieces and snapping them together.
Fair enough, but AT&T does spend ~1 billion in R&D. Verizon doesn't report their number but supposedly it is less. Innovation isn't just hardware development, and even if they are relying on other companies, they are pushing innovation by paying Cisco/Juniper.
A lot more happened than just swapping the box on my desk when Verizon came and installed FIOS. It took innovation to get from the 768kbps DSL line I had to the 50mbps FIOS connection. How much credit Verizon deserves for it, I don't know. Even if they did none of the innovation directly, they ended up paying for a lot of it.
Well, then we should have seen $150 billion in delivered broadband, since we have given $300 billion in tax subsidies to broadband providers, in exchange for broadband development.
We have not seen $150 billion in delivered broadband value.
Ergo, this argument is wrong. I do blame Big Cable.
Do you have a primary source for the $300 billion tax subsidy claim (which would be an indictment of the telcos if true). Something besides a link to a link to a link to something Bruce Kushnick has claimed?
I've read his reports, and while there seems to be a kernel of truth, the numbers are not, IMO, substantiated. He gets big numbers by claiming the telcos are making undeserved profits, which even if true, is not a subsidy.
This is a constantly repeated urban legend. The telcos never received anywhere near $300 billion in tax subsidies. It comes up constantly in threads like this, and the people claiming it can never back it up with actual data or proof of any sort, just vague statements.
The article you linked to in your other comment talks about spectrum being given to CBS and other TV broadcasters. Are you saying that CBS agreed to launch a broadband service in exchange for that spectrum?
It was part of the greater Telecom Act of 1996.. The broadcasters were gifted the spectrum largely because it was assumed that we'd have universal broadband by the time of the HD rollout. They're not causally linked, but the spectrum being swallowed by the broadcasters is a side-affect of the same nonsense.
A copy/paste from my other comment:
The more direct subsidies come from many other places. A good place to start is the Universal Service Fund[2]. Every landline bill, every cable bill, every mobile phone bill has a line item for "Universal Service" on it. These funds are collected from consumers then 'disbursed' to companies for them to provide service extensions. This has been happening since 1997. They've disbursed over $80B back to telecom companies as part of the telecom act, the GAO isn't too impressed with how it was being spent.[3] Besides the direct subsidies, they got favorable depreciation schedules,
The oddly interesting Robert Cringely did a special for PBS on the mess, which is probably the origin of the $200B number[4]:
Over the decade from 1994-2004 the major telephone companies profited
from higher phone rates paid by all of us, accelerated depreciation
on their networks, and direct tax credits an average of $2,000 per
subscriber for which the companies delivered precisely nothing in terms
of service to customers. That's $200 billion with nothing to be shown for it.
The Urban legend speaks – I wrote 3 books on this topic, which outline, in detail how New Networks generated the numbers.
In the 1990s, all of the phone companies in the US applied for and received alternative regulations which was based on their commitment to replace the copper utility wire, known as the PSTN, Public Switched Telephone Networks, with a fiber optic wire. This was based on then Al Gore’s call for America to be completely upgraded by 2010, called the information superhighway.
And the state laws were changed to give the companies billions of dollars per state and this was done by multiple financial incentives—where the phone companies’ services were no longer examined for profits, even though there was no competition at the time – so ‘call waiting’ cost less than a penny, and the companies charged $4.00 – and this included almost all services, such as non-published numbers. Their profift jumped from 12-14% to 35-40%; they had major increases in dividends, they took massive tax write-offs for the networks, among other things.
And the companies lied about their deployments but continued to keep the excess profits. – So, all rate increases were tied to these financial perks, where the state never went back and changed the laws or got refunds when the companies failed to deploy.
While states, like New Jersey, where they collected about $15 billion, were supposed to be upgraded by 2010 with a fiber optic service capable of 45 Mbps in both directions.
http://newnetworks.com/verizonnjbroadbandresources/
And it continues today with more rate increases. Our new report shows that regular POTS, plain old telephone service, customers were charged about $4 billion in New York State for ‘massive deployment of fiber optics’, even though the majority will never get any upgraded service.
I wrote 3 books on this. The first is about 1980-1998, with Foreword by Dr. Bob Metcalfe, second was in 2005 and the third book is coming out next month.
Book 2: http://www.newnetworks.com/broadbandscandals.htm
And we filed in multiples states over this since 1999, we have separate reports about the revenues and profits that’s been published.
If you got specific questions after you read the books, -contact me. I’ve been a telecom analyst for 32 years—and used to work for those who are now called Verizon, AT&T and Centurylink as a senior analyst at multiple telecom consulting firms. bruce@newnetworks.com
Do you know of a convenient table showing the numbers you use to get those profit figures? I'm mostly interested in a clear understanding of what you are saying, and it is easy to end up talking about different things when discussing corporate earnings.
The profit margin for Verizon today is less than 12%:
short answer..one table, only giving the 'corporate earnings' doesn't tell the story-- but I'll think about a few to post.. highlights.
First, the link is to 2014 financials; the tracking to charge for broadband by changing state laws started in 1993. Also, the numbers in Verizon's overall business reports are a garbage pail of revenues, etc. as the company has over 365 different investments and companies in over 150 countries.
On the earnings, my books use a standard EBITDA, earnings before income tax and depreciation and amoritization, and Return on Equity, among other indicators.
And we used the SEC-filed state-based annual reports, like a report for Verizon New York, but that data stopped in 2010; the FCC data stopped in 2007.
Worse, if you read our new report about Verizon New York you'll see that the numbers can't be ascertained easily anymore because of all of the cross-subsidies for all of the other businesses.
In fact, a previous report we wrote last year about Verizon NY is now part of FOIA challenge in court. It was used by Common Cause, Consumer Union, CWA in a proceeding calling for audits.
The overcharging is also different than just the 'corporate earnings'-- for example, In new york, Verizon got multiple rate increases on regular phone customers for 'massive deployment of fiber optics'; the additions come to about $4. billion from 2006-2013.
It's not legal to charge regular copper-based phone customers for a cable service, for example, or have expenses for the construction of the wireless cell tower wires.
However, at the same time, the company claims to have lost $11 billion in just New York for the last 5 years... the losses caused by the various affiliates (like Verizon Wireless is an affiliate of Verizon NY).. adding expenses.
You can easily get to $200B from the spectrum value alone.
In 2008, as part of the digital transition, 52 MHz in the 700-band were auctioned off for $19B. The telcos were gifted 295mhz of spectrum for the digital expansion when they agreed to invest in broadband. Even if it's only half as valuable as that 52 MHz allotment, simple math indicates a value of over $400B.
The article you linked to does not say anything about broadcasters agreeing to invest in broadband.
and I have no idea what TV broadcasters and fiberoptic broadband have to do with eachother... they're entirely different industries. Comcast and Time Warner don't use TV airways--that's why they call it "cable".
Apologies if my earlier post was unclear, I deleted a few sections in favor of brevity but it was left confusing.
The spectrum giveaway to broadcasters was predicated on 'Universal Service' being supplied by telecom companies.[1] That digital TV spectrum would be immensely valuable for wireless communication today, so it should absolutely be considered a subsidy as a result of the Telecom Act.
The more direct subsidies come from many other places. A good place to start is the Universal Service Fund[2]. Every landline bill, every cable bill, every mobile phone bill has a line item for "Universal Service" on it. These funds are collected from consumers then 'disbursed' to companies for them to provide service extensions. This has been happening since 1997. They've disbursed over $80B back to telecom companies as part of the telecom act, the GAO isn't too impressed with how it was being spent.[3] Besides the direct subsidies, they got favorable depreciation schedules, and tax relief.
The oddly interesting Robert Cringely did a special for PBS on the mess, which is probably the origin of the $200B number[4]:
Over the decade from 1994-2004 the major telephone companies profited
from higher phone rates paid by all of us, accelerated depreciation
on their networks, and direct tax credits an average of $2,000 per
subscriber for which the companies delivered precisely nothing in terms
of service to customers. That's $200 billion with nothing to be shown for it.
Apologies if my earlier post was unclear, I deleted a few sections in favor of brevity but it was left confusing.
The spectrum giveaway to broadcasters was predicated on 'Universal Service' being supplied by telecom companies.[1] That digital TV spectrum would be immensely valuable for wireless communication today, so it should absolutely be considered a subsidy as a result of the Telecom Act.
The more direct subsidies come from many other places. A good place to start is the Universal Service Fund[2]. Every landline bill, every cable bill, every mobile phone bill has a line item for "Universal Service" on it. These funds are collected from consumers then 'disbursed' to companies for them to provide service extensions. This has been happening since 1997. They've disbursed over $80B back to telecom companies as part of the telecom act, the GAO isn't too impressed with how it was being spent.[3] Besides the direct subsidies, they got favorable depreciation schedules, and tax relief.
The oddly interesting Robert Cringely did a special for PBS on the mess, which is probably the origin of the $200B number[4]:
Over the decade from 1994-2004 the major telephone companies profited
from higher phone rates paid by all of us, accelerated depreciation
on their networks, and direct tax credits an average of $2,000 per
subscriber for which the companies delivered precisely nothing in terms
of service to customers. That's $200 billion with nothing to be shown for it.
There are a number of cities in the San Francisco Bay area that do offer such agreements, and competition has sprung up. When I used to live in Daly City, there was a choice between Comcast and Astound, and from what I could see by reviews, both services seemed to be better than the neighboring cities because of it.
Yes - were it not for municipalities' ability to enforce monopoly rights we would often have multiple landline, cable, garbage, electric and other providers competing on quality and cost. Some say these are "natural monopolies" but there are cities around the world where consumers have a choice of providers for these services. True natural monopolies are very, very rare but are almost always created by government action. Patents are another example.
> Yes - were it not for municipalities' ability to enforce monopoly rights we would often have multiple landline, cable, garbage, electric and other providers competing on quality and cost.
You are conflating different types of problems.
Things which are natural monopolies are phone, cable, internet, electricity, water, etc. It is needlessly expensive to lay in multiple cables/pipes to a house solely in order to provide competition. Oddly, cable/internet is one of the few places where this actually isn't completely true since pulling a single fiber is almost as expensive as pulling multiple fibers.
I don't know why you cite garbage collection, though. Garbage collection is completely different. I know many towns that have multiple garbage collection services. You don't have to lay in an infrastructure in order to collect garbage.
So, what do you do? Make the Electric company put up New Companies A-Z's lines for free? That doesn't work and would quickly lead to companies covering the lucrative part of town (read: "rich") and widening the digital divide.
It comes back to the bad decision that didn't force Cable to be a common carrier. Had that happened, we'd end up with a situation like DSL where there are multiple vendors, except the lines would have the same speed capabilities as Cable.
So, in short, it comes back to a bad FCC decision. Requiring a bunch of new physical infrastructure isn't needed when the existing could just be broken up and leased out as dumb pipes.